The wiki has recently been updated. Please contact me by talk page or email if you encounter any issues.

User:Masako/sandbox: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 33: Line 33:


== adpositions ==
== adpositions ==
== syntax ==
The basic structure of a '''Kala''' sentence is:
AGENT--PATIENT--VERB (or [[Wikipedia:Subject–object–verb|'''SOV''']])
The agent is the person or thing doing the action described by the verb; The patient is the recipient of that action. The importance of word order can be seen by comparing the following sentences:
* '''mita tlaka anya''' - <small>dog man see</small> - ''The dog sees the man.''
* '''tlaka mita anya''' - <small>man dog see</small> - ''The man sees the dog.''
In both sentences, the words are identical, the only way to know who is seeing whom is by the order of the words in the sentence.
=== adverbial ===
=== coordinate ===
=== relative ===


== derivation ==
== derivation ==

Revision as of 12:25, 31 March 2016


allophony

stress

grammar

noun phrases

The basic noun phrase in Kala is PREPOSITION DETERMINER NOUN DESCRIPTIVE-VERB RELATIVE-CLAUSE. Depending on context, this is fairly predominant with a few exceptions.

determiners

Determiners includes various particles, demonstratives, and quantifiers. Most nouns will have exactly one of these. They usually come before their nouns. Possessives are semantically determiners, but they can't carry determiner inflections, so an appropriate particle or pronoun is brought in for them.

quantifiers

correlative pronouns

verbs

mood

The negative mood (always marked finally) is indicated by the suffix –k or –nke (when the last syllable contains /k/).

  • mita inayek - dog eat-PST-NEG - The dog did not eat.
  • mita mokunke - dog sleep-NEG - The dog does not sleep.

copula

adjectives

adpositions

derivation

compounding

sample texts

lexicon